The effect of prophylactic hpv vaccines on oral and oropharyngeal hpv infection—a systematic review

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

The effect of prophylactic hpv vaccines on oral and oropharyngeal hpv infection—a systematic review. / Nielsen, Kristoffer Juul; Jakobsen, Kathrine Kronberg; Jensen, Jakob Schmidt; Grønhøj, Christian; Von Buchwald, Christian.

I: Viruses, Bind 13, Nr. 7, 1339, 07.2021.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Nielsen, KJ, Jakobsen, KK, Jensen, JS, Grønhøj, C & Von Buchwald, C 2021, 'The effect of prophylactic hpv vaccines on oral and oropharyngeal hpv infection—a systematic review', Viruses, bind 13, nr. 7, 1339. https://doi.org/10.3390/v13071339

APA

Nielsen, K. J., Jakobsen, K. K., Jensen, J. S., Grønhøj, C., & Von Buchwald, C. (2021). The effect of prophylactic hpv vaccines on oral and oropharyngeal hpv infection—a systematic review. Viruses, 13(7), [1339]. https://doi.org/10.3390/v13071339

Vancouver

Nielsen KJ, Jakobsen KK, Jensen JS, Grønhøj C, Von Buchwald C. The effect of prophylactic hpv vaccines on oral and oropharyngeal hpv infection—a systematic review. Viruses. 2021 jul.;13(7). 1339. https://doi.org/10.3390/v13071339

Author

Nielsen, Kristoffer Juul ; Jakobsen, Kathrine Kronberg ; Jensen, Jakob Schmidt ; Grønhøj, Christian ; Von Buchwald, Christian. / The effect of prophylactic hpv vaccines on oral and oropharyngeal hpv infection—a systematic review. I: Viruses. 2021 ; Bind 13, Nr. 7.

Bibtex

@article{6b691361b64b401485f6574766982e6b,
title = "The effect of prophylactic hpv vaccines on oral and oropharyngeal hpv infection—a systematic review",
abstract = "Human papillomavirus (HPV) imposes an increased risk of developing cervical, anal and oropharyngeal cancer. In the Western world, HPV infection is currently the major cause of oropharyngeal cancer. The effectiveness of HPV vaccines for oral or oropharyngeal HPV infection is yet to be determined. This study conducted a systematic literature search in Pubmed and Embase. Studies investigating the impact of HPV vaccines on oral or oropharyngeal HPV infection were enrolled. This review reports the relative prevention percentage (RPP), including a risk of bias assessment as well as a quality assessment study. Nine studies were included (48,777 participants): five cross-sectional studies; one randomized community trial study (RCT); one longitudinal cohort study; and two case-control studies. A significant mean RPP of 83.9% (66.6–97.8%) was calculated from the cross-sectional studies, 82.4% in the included RCT and 83% in the longitudinal cohort study. Further, two case-control studies that measured antibody response in participants immunized with HPV vaccines were included. Respectively, 100% and 93.2% of participants developed HPV-16 Immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies in oral fluids post-vaccination. Analysis of the studies identified a significant decrease in vaccine-type oral or oropharyngeal HPV infections in study participants immunized with HPV vaccines across study designs and heterogenous populations. Further, a significant percentage of participants developed IgG antibodies in oral fluid post-vaccination.",
keywords = "Head and neck cancer, Human papillomavirus, Oncology, Oropharyngeal cancer, Vaccines",
author = "Nielsen, {Kristoffer Juul} and Jakobsen, {Kathrine Kronberg} and Jensen, {Jakob Schmidt} and Christian Gr{\o}nh{\o}j and {Von Buchwald}, Christian",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.",
year = "2021",
month = jul,
doi = "10.3390/v13071339",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "Viruses",
issn = "1999-4915",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The effect of prophylactic hpv vaccines on oral and oropharyngeal hpv infection—a systematic review

AU - Nielsen, Kristoffer Juul

AU - Jakobsen, Kathrine Kronberg

AU - Jensen, Jakob Schmidt

AU - Grønhøj, Christian

AU - Von Buchwald, Christian

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

PY - 2021/7

Y1 - 2021/7

N2 - Human papillomavirus (HPV) imposes an increased risk of developing cervical, anal and oropharyngeal cancer. In the Western world, HPV infection is currently the major cause of oropharyngeal cancer. The effectiveness of HPV vaccines for oral or oropharyngeal HPV infection is yet to be determined. This study conducted a systematic literature search in Pubmed and Embase. Studies investigating the impact of HPV vaccines on oral or oropharyngeal HPV infection were enrolled. This review reports the relative prevention percentage (RPP), including a risk of bias assessment as well as a quality assessment study. Nine studies were included (48,777 participants): five cross-sectional studies; one randomized community trial study (RCT); one longitudinal cohort study; and two case-control studies. A significant mean RPP of 83.9% (66.6–97.8%) was calculated from the cross-sectional studies, 82.4% in the included RCT and 83% in the longitudinal cohort study. Further, two case-control studies that measured antibody response in participants immunized with HPV vaccines were included. Respectively, 100% and 93.2% of participants developed HPV-16 Immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies in oral fluids post-vaccination. Analysis of the studies identified a significant decrease in vaccine-type oral or oropharyngeal HPV infections in study participants immunized with HPV vaccines across study designs and heterogenous populations. Further, a significant percentage of participants developed IgG antibodies in oral fluid post-vaccination.

AB - Human papillomavirus (HPV) imposes an increased risk of developing cervical, anal and oropharyngeal cancer. In the Western world, HPV infection is currently the major cause of oropharyngeal cancer. The effectiveness of HPV vaccines for oral or oropharyngeal HPV infection is yet to be determined. This study conducted a systematic literature search in Pubmed and Embase. Studies investigating the impact of HPV vaccines on oral or oropharyngeal HPV infection were enrolled. This review reports the relative prevention percentage (RPP), including a risk of bias assessment as well as a quality assessment study. Nine studies were included (48,777 participants): five cross-sectional studies; one randomized community trial study (RCT); one longitudinal cohort study; and two case-control studies. A significant mean RPP of 83.9% (66.6–97.8%) was calculated from the cross-sectional studies, 82.4% in the included RCT and 83% in the longitudinal cohort study. Further, two case-control studies that measured antibody response in participants immunized with HPV vaccines were included. Respectively, 100% and 93.2% of participants developed HPV-16 Immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies in oral fluids post-vaccination. Analysis of the studies identified a significant decrease in vaccine-type oral or oropharyngeal HPV infections in study participants immunized with HPV vaccines across study designs and heterogenous populations. Further, a significant percentage of participants developed IgG antibodies in oral fluid post-vaccination.

KW - Head and neck cancer

KW - Human papillomavirus

KW - Oncology

KW - Oropharyngeal cancer

KW - Vaccines

U2 - 10.3390/v13071339

DO - 10.3390/v13071339

M3 - Review

C2 - 34372545

AN - SCOPUS:85110624067

VL - 13

JO - Viruses

JF - Viruses

SN - 1999-4915

IS - 7

M1 - 1339

ER -

ID: 305175780